Ewing v. Alan Wood Steel Co.

12 A.2d 121, 138 Pa. Super. 519, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 385
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 18, 1939
DocketAppeal, 291
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 12 A.2d 121 (Ewing v. Alan Wood Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ewing v. Alan Wood Steel Co., 12 A.2d 121, 138 Pa. Super. 519, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 385 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker* J.,

The only question raised in this appeal of a workmen’s compensation case is whether the claimant’s husband was in the course of his employment with defendant when he met with a fatal accident. The referee found that he was and awarded compensation. The board affirmed that award and, on appeal to a court of common pleas, judgment was entered for the claimant. We are of the opinion that the judgment must be reversed on the ground that there was not sufficient evidence to support the award.

William Ewing, on November 20, 1937, then 68 years of age, was in the employ of the defendant as a night watchman and had been so employed for at least eight years. Prior to that time he had experience as a municipal policeman and enjoyed a reputation for courage in the performance of his duties. He was one of twenty-six persons employed as watchmen and policemen to guard defendant’s large manufacturing plant, which extended for a distance of several miles along a river with a five-story office building at one end. Ewing reported for duty as usual at 4 P. M., and his shift was to continue until midnight. The decedent and a number of other employees were sworn in as night watchmen by the Court of Quarter Sessions of .Montgomery County and were authorized by that order to carry guns and make arrests. However, Ewing’s superior had forbidden him to carry,'a gun. It was the duty of Ewing to watch the office building and his superior officer instructed him that at no time, under any circumstances, *521 was lie to leave that building but that in case of emergency he should use a telephone located in the office building and call the chief or other policemen employed by the company or the public authorities. The decedent was instructed to light a lamp near a bridge on his way to work at four o’clock. The lamp and a stone quarry hereafter mentioned were in opposite directions from the office building. The normal procedure for Ewing was to enter the building and, after the clerks left, lock the doors on the inside and remain until he was relieved at midnight by another watchman.

Shortly prior to midnight the ¿decedent’s wife and son called at the plant with an automobile for the purpose of taking him to his home, but the decedent 'failed to respond to signals to open the door and other watchmen were summoned. It was necessary to break into the office building and when this was done Ewing could not be found, although the search was continued until daylight. On entering'the building they found decedent’s lunch bag containing one of two sandwiches he had taken with him that day and some fruit. Nearby on a desk were decedent’s false teeth, containing particles of food, which suggested that he had started to eat his lunch. On the desk were his reading glasses, an open newspaper, a package of tobacco, and his watchman’s clock. A watchman’s clock indicated that he had been on the premises until after 6 A5 P. M., but he had not subsequently operated a time clock and there was no evidence that he had called the headquarters of the police department. Normally he would have punched the time clock again at 9 P. M.

Early on the morning of November 22, the dead body of Ewing was found at the bottom of a quarry on real estate owned by the defendant, the nearest point of which property was at least 800 feet from the office building. The body was discovered by a hunter at the foot of a high cliff overlooking the quarry. Foot tracks at the summit, the location of a pair of glasses which *522 he wore continuously and his flashlight, as well as a disturbance of the ground in the vicinity, led the referee to find, and we think properly, that decedent had fallen from the cliff a distance of 85 feet into a rocky formation and as a result was killed. An autopsy was held and the physician in charge testified that there was a laceration in the scalp and^on the left side of the bridge of the nose; that there was a large contused area on his back and bruises covering the entire) backs of both hands; That the'left hip and the right wrist were dislocated and there were lacerations at the tip of the right index finger; that there were complete fractures of seven ribs on the right side of the breast bone, the left clavicle, and the first three ribsi on the left side. The decedent had on his person when found $250 in cash.

On the inside of the window of the office building near the bench where the decedent had apparently been sitting, moisture had been rubbed from,the glass at a distance from the floor corresponding with the decedent’s head, from which the inference was drawn that the decedent had been looking out of that window recently, and the further inference that there was something on the outside which attracted his attention. There had been some thievery of scrap iron from other parts of the mill located some distance from the office building and other officers were investigating that circumstance.

The stone quarry, while owned, by the defendant, was not then used in connection with the operation of its plant or for any other purpose, the evidence being that it had,been purchased solely for the reason that blasting operations which had been carried on there had annoyed the employees located in the office building. It was separated from the other grounds of the defendant used in its operations by a dense undergrowth.

The burden of proof rested on claimant to show by a preponderance of the evidence all the elements necessary to support an award: Gondron v. Phila. & Reading C. & I. Co,, 78 Pa. Superior Ct. 133, 139; Stauffer v. Susq.

*523 Col. Co., 116 Pa. Superior Ct. 277, 280, 176 A. 740; but the burden of proving exceptions, or an affirmative defense, rested on tbe one interposing such a defense: Keyes v. N. Y., Ontario & W. Ry. Co., 265 Pa. 105, 107, 108 A. 406. It is also provided by section 301 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, as amended (77 PS §431), that the burden of proving self-inflicted injuries is on the employer. Such burden is not sustained in any case by evidence that warrants nothing more than a guess or a conjecture. The immediate question therefore is whether there is in this record evidence which, if believed, will justify men of ordinary reason and fairness in affirming the proposition that Ewing met his death while in the course of his employment with the defendant: 5 Wigmore on Evidence §2494, p. 459.

“Where no facts appear indicating anything to the contrary, it may be presumed logically that an employee at his regular place of service, during his usual working hours, is there in discharge ,of isome duty incident to his employment; and, when the dead body of an employee is found on the premises of his employer, at or near his regular place of service, under circumstances fairly indicating an accidental death which probably occurred during the usual working hours of the deceased, the inference may fairly be drawn, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the employee was injured in the course of his employment” (Italics supplied) : Flucker v. Carnegie Steel Co., 263 Pa. 113, 119, 106 A. 192; Dannals v. Sylvania Township, 255 Pa. 156, 99 A. 475.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Garcia v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board
469 A.2d 585 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1983)
Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Commonwealth
441 A.2d 518 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1982)
Del Rossi v. Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission
233 A.2d 597 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1967)
Allshouse v. City of Pittsburgh
37 Pa. D. & C.2d 27 (Alleghany County Court of Common Pleas, 1965)
Mackey v. Swift & Co.
12 Pa. D. & C.2d 191 (Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, 1957)
Giallonardo v. St. Joseph's College
111 A.2d 178 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1955)
Hood v. Pennsylvania R. R.
59 Pa. D. & C. 185 (Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas, 1947)
Hurtuk v. H. C. Frick Coke Co.
43 A.2d 559 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)
Connelly v. Bachman
38 A.2d 348 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1944)
Werner v. Allegheny County
33 A.2d 451 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Strunk v. E. D. Huffman & Sons
19 A.2d 539 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 121, 138 Pa. Super. 519, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewing-v-alan-wood-steel-co-pasuperct-1939.